IN BRIEF:

New tool to track eye diseases

Share via

Share permalink

Washington:Apr 30, Agencies:,

Apr 30 2010, 21:25pm ist

updated: Apr 30 2010, 21:25pm ist

In fact, this tool even promises to detect some eye diseases so early that they may be reversed before any permanent damage can occur. Its use may well extend to other areas of the body in the future, and this tool may also give physicians a more precise way of evaluating the effectiveness of therapies.

“Quantitative knowledge of the dynamic molecular changes in health and disease will not only advance our understanding, but also change the way medicine will be practiced in the future,” said Ali Hafezi-Moghadam, study co-author and ophthalmologist at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

To make this discovery, Hafezi-Moghadam and colleagues combined fluorescent microspheres with molecules found on the surface of immune cells. These molecules are up-regulated early in inflammation. The scientists took this compound and combined it once more with custom-designed imaging probes.

Then they used both single and double-combined probes targeting endothelial markers in the eyes of test animals because of the eye’s unique accessibility to light-based imaging. The endothelium is the thin layer of cells that line the interior surface of blood vessels.

Results showed a strikingly superior sensitivity of the double-conjugated probes that allowed detection of molecules that may be expressed at very low levels, which occur in many diseases.

Follow us

We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve user experience. This includes personalising content and advertising. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies, revised Privacy Policy.